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Adobe After Effects CS3 User Manual

Page 481

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AFTER EFFECTS CS3

User Guide

476

Play back your strokes using standard (spacebar) preview or RAM preview, or by viewing the results of a rendered
composition.

Note: Regardless of how you record your strokes and which Playback mode you select when recording, you can always
switch to another Playback Mode at any time.

While the playback mode chosen affects what you see during playback, it also determines what you see while you are
drawing strokes. Onion Skin mode, for example, is used primarily while drawing strokes, and then another mode is
selected before rendering.

Note: Note the position of the current-time indicator when you begin drawing strokes. This position affects the
appearance of strokes in all modes except All Strokes.

Adjust the following controls to affect the way that strokes appear in the composition:

All Strokes

Displays all strokes for the full duration of the layer, regardless of the position of the current-time

indicator when you drew them.

Past Strokes

Displays strokes from the time at which they were recorded until the end of the layer (the Out point).

Hold Strokes

Displays strokes from the frame on which they were drawn and holds them only until the point at

which the next stroke was drawn. This mode treats strokes like Hold keyframes; as a stroke appears, it replaces the
next, as in a slide show.

Animate Strokes

Begins drawing the stroke at the current time (that is, at the frame where the current-time indicator

is when you draw the stroke). The stroke animates in the same way as it was drawn.

Current Frame

The default Draw Strokes setting. This mode displays the stroke only at the frame at which it was

painted.

Onion Skin

Displays strokes drawn on the current frame plus strokes drawn on the surrounding few frames. These

additional strokes appear color-coded and at reduced opacity, to distinguish them from the strokes on the current
frame. Those strokes actually exist only on the frames in which they are drawn. Onion-skinning is very useful for
drawing frame-by-frame animations because it gives you reference points for the stroke positions.

Use the Onion Skinning options in the Vector Paint Preferences dialog box to specify how previous and forward
strokes appear when Onion Skin is the active playback mode. (To open Vector Paint Preferences, use the Vector Paint
options menu and choose Options.) These options include the following:

Frames Backward/Frames Forward

Sets the number of frames backward or forward that are displayed. Both

backward and forward frames are displayed unless one or both of these values is set to 0.

Color Backward/Color Forward

Sets the color of the display of backward and forward strokes.

Skin Opacity

Sets the percentage of opacity for onion skin strokes.

Adjust the playback speed for the Vector Paint effect

The Playback Speed value in the Effect Controls panel can change the timing at which painted strokes appear in
previews and rendered compositions. Playback Speed affects the Vector Paint strokes only if you set Playback Mode
to Past Strokes, Hold Strokes, or Animate Strokes.

When you create strokes on a layer, the stroke is tied to the location of the current-time indicator in the Timeline
panel when you start drawing. Vector Paint also records the amount of time you take to draw the stroke. For example,
you might start painting a stroke with the current-time indicator set to 0:00 and use 1.5 seconds to draw the stroke.
Then, you might move the current-time indicator to 2:00 and draw a second stroke (leaving 0.5 seconds between the
completion of the first stroke and the beginning of the second one). For this example, let’s say you use 1.0 second to
draw the second stroke. The entire process covers 3.0 seconds on the timeline.